British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg 'Kills' Snoopers Charter
judgecorp writes "The Deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg, has effectively 'killed' the Communications Data Bill which would have required service providers to share personal communications data with the police. Clegg has withdrawn the support of the Liberal Democrat Party (part of the Coalition in power in the UK) from the so-called 'Snooper's Charter.' The announcement is timed to block the measure from the Queen's Speech on 8 May, which introduces the next programme of planned legislation."
Lilly livered little Cleggy has actually some use. Colour me shocked.
And in a few months a new law will be proposed: 'The anti-terrorist and anti-child porn law for public protection', that requires ISP's to do exactly the same.
The lib dems are getting my vote next election a long with many other young peoples votes, Cameron has made sure of that! they are about the only party that hasn't recently had a chance of changing the country for the greater good without making it 50 times worse, if lib dem's do take power stay pro privacy and pull us straight out of the EU!
The UK become addicted to this from the early day - the Soviet Embassy was sloppy in 1930's with codes - wonderful in clear text.
Enigma and Lorentz gave the UK amazing near realtime insights into ww2.
For a short time the Soviets had so much data in the very early 1950's they where sloppy again.
Then you had every call into and out of the UK during the cold war.
Later voice prints, the internet, cell towers... it all becomes part of life for every sitting gov.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
If government are elected to pursue the will of the people, why, then, do government engage in actions that clearly are not the will of the people?
'Cause a British government is typically elected by about 20% of the people, and election winners are typically determined by the votes of less than a million people in the Midlands where no party has a clear majority.
In this case, the British people voted 'none of the above' and refused to give any party a majority, but they got a government anyway.
He killed it, but now we can't investigate because we have no access to the critical data! Rats! RATS!
I normally tend to agree because I think FPTP is an abomination.
But this time round I think it's the most legitimate government we've had in years. It's a government that between the two parties involved actually got a majority of the popular vote. The policies that have stemmed from it are are roughly proportional split based somewhat on those proportions - for example, the Tories wanted £12,000 tuition fees, the Lib Dems wanted the status quo, The end result was £9,000.
This is a government that only really the people can take responsibility for. Most people didn't vote Lib Dem so don't have the right to complain that they didn't block tuition fee increases for because that's what most the population voted for (i.e. the 77% that didn't vote Lib Dem).
We really did get pretty much what we voted for this time.
This law will eventually be passed in one form or another. It will be interesting to see how they are going to monitor my communications through my VPN to Venezuela. :-)